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On Sun, 13 Apr 2008 23:49:31 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Apr 13, 8:07 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: At the moment there seem to be three choices (1) Jotun self polishing paint in various grades depending on boat speed; (2) Chugoku self polishing, again in different grades and (3) a copper and epoxy mix that used to be called "CopperBot" but I now believe has a different name, that is supposed to last ten years or more. Now, to cut to the chase. Does anybody have actual experience with current anti fouling paints in tropical waters? I put CopperBot on my boat in 2001 and then sanded it down and put Devoe ABC on over it in 2002. Copperbot makes a nice barrier coat. The good news was that it would stand up to serious sanding the bad news was that it needed it all the time. Unless you dive the boat weekly I wouldn't go that route. This is what I had suspected, although an article in Practical Boat Owner alleged that one boat hadn't scrubbed the bottom in ten years. I watched a video of the stuff being applied and it is literally just epoxy and copper dust. They even tell you to keep stirring the can while you are rolling it on. It is also a minimum of four coats -- sort of a modern day copper sheeting. I couldn't see how it could be effective UNLESS you scrubbed it pretty aggressively on a frequent basis. At the moment I am leaning toward the Jotun as I have used Jotun before and it did what they said it would and secondly, a mate who is in Cochin,India at the moment is using it and swears that he doesn't have any growth at all. He has been at anchor in Cochin for about two months now so I'll see what his boat looks like when he gets back. Pretty much all the serious tropical cruisers I know use ablatives and most get 18-24 months out of a multi- coat application. I've used a couple of different Devoe products have done a few seasons with Interlux. I'm currently into my second season with Micron Extra. IME, the ablative copper paints work very well for 3-4 months and then get dramatically less effective. However, they are really easy to clean. By the end of two seasons you'll typically be down to almost no paint and any that's left will have very little anti-fouling ability... The Interlux products are more expensive than the Devoe stuff that I was getting in New Zealand but not notably better. -- Tom. Devoe isn't available here, as far as I know and I have had extremely bad experience with International paint - some people say because International mixes the paint that is sold here in Thailand. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
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